Radical Love: From Separation to Connection with the Earth, Each Other, and Ourselves

Radical Love: From Separation to Connection with the Earth, Each Other, and Ourselves

Talk
Wednesday, January 28, 2026 - 19:00 to 20:30
Enviromental
Life
Spiritual
Inspiring
Alternatives says: 
To see peace in our lifetimes, we have to practice love
Description: 

Satish Kumar is an Indian pacifist, former monk, environmental activist, author, and educator. He left his homeland nearly 70 years ago, and he has been inspiring global change ever since.

His recent book and documentary film, both titled Radical Love, contain a lifetime of advice on how to love ourselves, others, and all beings on planet Earth — even those we may find unlovable.

Satish Kumar is well known for his epic 8,000-mile walk for world peace in the 1960s from India to the nuclear capitals of Moscow, Paris, London, and Washington, DC. Wherever he traveled, he found that human beings were capable of a love that could overcome hatred and division.
 

In this evening talk, Satish will take us through simple lessons for transforming our time of ecological crisis, conflict, and scarcity into one in which we experience harmony and radical love with nature, safety, and abundance.

In this talk and Q&A, we will explore the transformative power of love in all its forms, from romantic love to love for one's family and community to love for the planet and all beings.

About the speaker, Satish Kumar

A former monk and long-term peace and environment activist, Satish Kumar has been quietly setting the Global Agenda for change for over 50 years. He was just nine when he left his family home to join the wandering Jains and 18 when he decided he could achieve more back in the world, campaigning for land reform in India and working to turn Gandhi’s vision of a renewed India and a peaceful world into reality.

Inspired in his early 20s by the example of the British peace activist Bertrand Russell, Satish embarked on an 8,000-mile peace pilgrimage together with E.P. Menon. Carrying no money and depending on the kindness and hospitality of strangers, they walked from India to America, via Moscow, London and Paris, to deliver a humble packet of ‘peace tea’ to the then leaders of the world’s four nuclear powers.

In 1973 Satish settled in the United Kingdom taking up the post of editor of Resurgence magazine, a position he has held ever since, making him the UK’s longest-serving editor of the same magazine. During this time, he has been the guiding spirit behind a number of now internationally-respected ecological and educational ventures including Schumacher College in South Devon where he is still a Visiting Fellow.

In his 50th year, Satish undertook another pilgrimage – again carrying no money.  This time, he walked 2,000 miles to the holy places of Britain, a venture he describes as a celebration of his love of life and nature. In July 2000 he was awarded an Honorary Doctorate in Education from the University of Plymouth. In July 2001, he received an Honorary Doctorate in Literature from the University of Lancaster.  And in the November of that same year, he was presented with the Jamnalal Bajaj International Award for Promoting Gandhian Values Abroad.

His autobiography, No Destination, first published by Green Books in 1978, has sold over 50,000 copies. He is also the author of You Are, Therefore I Am: A Declaration of Dependence and The Buddha and the Terrorist.

In 2005, Satish was Sue Lawley’s guest on Radio 4’s Desert Island Discs. In 2008, as part of BBC2’s Natural World series, he presented a 50-minute documentary from Dartmoor, Earth Pilgrim, which was watched by over 3.6 million people. He also appears regularly in the media, on a range of programmes including Thought for the Day and Midweek.

Satish is on the Advisory Board of Our Future Planet, a unique online community sharing ideas for real change and in recognition of his commitment to animal welfare and compassionate living, he was recently elected vice-president with the RSPCA. He continues to teach and run workshops on reverential ecology, holistic education and voluntary simplicity and is a much sought-after speaker both in the UK and abroad.

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Timetable: 
18:30
Doors open
19:00
Talk commences
20:30
Talk ends
Venue: